TheOldHokie
Well-known member
Lifetime Member
Equipment
L3901/LA525, B7200DT/B1630, G2160/RCK60, G2460/RCK60
I dont think that picture is taken with the front wheels off the ground but from that angle you cant tell.The retracted over-all length eye-to-eye is the same. The Kubota cylinder leaves 1.5" of rod unused (likely for safety), the aftermarket cylinder is 1.5" longer and takes advantage of the otherwise unused rod length. The aftermarket stroke is therefore 1.5" longer resulting in 11-3/4" additional lift height. Since the retracted length is the same there is no loss of negative bucket height and therefore the front of the tractor can be lifted off the ground the same amount.
The downsides are there should be 35% more lifting ability but [due to friction?] some is lost and there's "only" 32% more lift according to the videos I've seen, and lift speed should be 35% slower due to the larger cylinder and timed results seem to show 37% slower. In my guestimation since both figures are within 3% it could be partially due to observational error, but even if accurate is less than what's noticeable. (I've found less than 10% change is "generally unnoticeable" in casual observation of most things.)
I'd also guess 35% is about the most the lift force should be increased by, more than that will likely eventually result in the user doing something to cause structural deformation.
Buy lets assume they are anx he has done what you think.
HPBX300 DIMENSIONS
Retracted length = 20"
Stroke = 13.8"
Extended length = 33.8"
I dont need to measure cycle time I can compute it. For a fixed flow rate it is proportional to volume. Since he increased volume 37% the cycle time will increase by 37%. Thats simple arithmetic.
EDIT
The OEM cylinders are actually 40mm bore = 1.58". Redoing the lift force arithmetic using that number gives ypu a 25% increase in lift force with a 1.75" cylinder and 61% increase with a 2" cylinder.
Dan
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